Introducing the AI Mirror Project

Guest post by Brian Baker. Opinions expressed are those of the guest blogger.

In a sense, the disruption genAI has caused – regardless of whether you see it as a net positive or negative – has held up a mirror to education, giving us new perspectives into known issues and exposing ones that were under the surface.

That opportunity for novel insights and increased awareness spurred 24th Century Education, an Oregon-based consulting firm, to launch the AI Mirror Project. The project seeks to capture the voices of those living this unique moment in education by asking:

What has the introduction of genAI taught us about critical issues within the education system?

The project will progress through three phases:

  • Hearing from you: Through December 19, 2025, our website will collect submissions from educators, students, caregivers, the most enthusiastic AI evangelists, the most critical skeptics – anyone who is involved in any way with the education system and has reflected on these issues.
    You are welcome to capture your thoughts in text, images, video, audio, or whatever format allows you to best share your voice.
  • Analysis & research synthesis: We will look for themes among the perspectives that are shared, then synthesize those with available research to better understand the issues identified.
  • Final report: 24th Century Education will compile and share our findings, hoping to use this disruptive moment as a means to better understand our current reality and work towards our goal of building a better future.

(Gemini, 2025)

While the education system has learned and is continuing to learn many valuable lessons about genAI since its introduction, this project instead focuses on what the introduction of and reaction to these tools has shown us about existing issues and challenges, such as…

  • Safety and privacy
  • Assessment
  • Human connection
  • Student engagement and relevance of learning experiences
  • Individual and systemic bias
  • The interaction between education and other large systems (government, industry, economy)
  • Education’s role in maintaining democracy
  • The influence of tech companies
  • Media literacy and misinformation
  • Mental health and digital well-being
  • Anthropomorphization
  • The role of education and the balance between preparing students for working in the existing economy versus equipping them to shape a more just system
  • The vital role of teachers
  • Student agency
  • Critical thinking and cognitive offloading

… along with any other topic that genAI’s introduction into education has made you consider.

There are many, often competing narratives about AI’s role in education. 24th Century Education is hoping to cut through that discourse and instead dive deeper into some of the existing challenges that have, in some cases, been highlighted by genAI’s impact, and that in others have been obscured by it.

To accomplish that, please share your voice and let us know how this moment has exposed existing issues within education.

AI’s introduction and use have touched on nearly every financial, instructional, and social-emotional function of schools. It has implications for equity, well-being, and the health of our democracy, environment, and economy. It has vast implications for education, a system that binds today’s learning to tomorrow’s reality.

At 24th Century Education, we are fueled by the belief that humanity needs an environment, economy, and society where all people can thrive, and that we must use education today to help students develop the knowledge, skills, and dispositions that they need to create that tomorrow.

We believe understanding the present is essential to building the better future we envision for the education system, and we hope that this project contributes to that mission.

You can visit and make a contribution to the AI Mirror Project here. If you have any questions, please contact 24th Century Education’s Chief Learning Officer, Brian Baker – brian@24thcenturyeducation.com.


About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI’. In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, AI and the Law, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.

Tips for Using AI and for Talking to Students About It

My Prior post on Edutopia

AI isn’t coming—it’s already here. It has been embedded in the various educational platforms we use and the assessments we give. It’s likely involved in both the professional development we participate in and the writing and work that our students are doing.

As an educator, speaker, and advocate for technology integration, I’ve spent a lot of time researching, using, and teaching with AI so that I can prepare students and other educators. In my classroom, from using a variety of AI tools that help me save time so I can spend it working with students to integrating chatbots to support student learning, I see the value and impact of leveraging this technology. If we want our students to be ready for their future careers, we must start teaching them about AI. They need to move beyond being consumers of content and instead become creators and innovators.

Where Do We See AI?

For educators, many AI-powered platforms help us to target instruction, assess students, and find resources for our lessons.

Confidence building: Encouraging students to speak in class can be a challenge. At the end of 2023, I started to use SchoolAI with my students and created a “Sidekick” for them to have conversations in Spanish based on the content that I used for the prompt. They loved it—it not only helped them build language skills and confidence but also showed how AI can support their learning. MagicSchool AI is another great option, with a tutor function that helps students in areas where they need support. Both of these tools also have historical characters that students can chat with and other features to enhance learning. I love that I can monitor student responses, provide additional support, and adjust instruction as needed.

Using Eduaide, teachers can kick off a class debate with pros and cons and an outline to quickly get started, and they can also develop other collaborative and engaging activities for students.

For language learners, confidence matters. Snorkl enables students to practice speaking and receive real-time AI and teacher feedback. The AI gives real-time feedback on fluency and pronunciation, helping students grow as communicators and build confidence. Snorkl can be used with students starting in kindergarten, and it has a library full of ready-to-use activities. Throughout the times I have used Snorkl or one of the chatbots, the feedback provided has been tailored to each student’s responses and offered insights and examples to support their learning.

Continue reading the rest of this post on Edutopia.

About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI’. In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, AI and the Law, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.

From Curiosity to Confidence: Building AI Literacy Together

In collaboration with Kira

“Where are you with AI today—curious, testing, using weekly, or all in?”

That’s how we opened our recent panel on AI literacy for educators. Whether you feel energized, overwhelmed, or skeptical, you’re not alone, and that’s exactly why having conversations around AI and how to bring it into our schools matters.

Why AI Literacy, Why Now?

I enjoyed the opportunity to serve as the panelist for this great discussion about AI Literacy. We had so much engagement from attendees from more than 25 countries around the world!

The panelists engaged in rich discussion and offered insight into our role as educators and how we can help our students and ourselves better understand: What do we need to be doing when AI-powered tools surround us?” How does learning change?

Literacy isn’t about knowing how to navigate AI platforms, but rather it is about habits of mind. Asking better questions, evaluating outputs, knowing how to evaluate sources, understanding the limitations of AI, and aligning use with learning goals, ethics, and policy. AI is something that we need to consider and how it is involved in our planning, teaching, assessment, and reflection. And being able to determine whether something is real or not, something that I thought more about after reading the book Futureproof, by Kevin Roos, two years ago. Shifting from digital literacy to discernment is key.

The Skepticism Is Real (and Reasonable)

We started our discussion with what we called initial skepticism. Many teachers are hesitant to introduce AI into their classrooms, schools, or even their own workflows. As Jeff Bradbury put it:

“There are educators out there trying to figure this out, but they are not yet sure how to do it. There are educators out there who are scared. And then you have educators on the other side of the innovation curve… How do you work with all of those at the same time?”

He continued: “That question hits home. In every district I visit, I meet the AI All-Ins, the Cautious Curious, and the Not-Now crowd. Suppose this is your staff, good, because having discussions with educators who have these different viewpoints is key. It means you have internal mentors and internal skeptics—the two groups you need most to build something responsible and resilient, especially when the topic is AI”.

Some ideas shared: Start with a common language or practices. Define “AI literacy” and what that means. Identify how to best use AI (lesson planning, differentiation, feedback drafting) and some ways where you want to avoid the use of AI or be more cautious (grading without verification, sensitive data, replacing teacher judgment). Establishing clear guardrails reduces anxiety and helps to ensure that AI implementation in our schools is consistent and purposeful.

The “Aha” That Changes Everything: Specificity

Jeff told a story about a colleague—a music teacher—who tried AI “seven or eight different ways” to create a budget and concluded, “I hate this thing.” The pivot came with one question: “Were you specific?” Did he tell the AI it was for a middle school music program? The approximate budget? The categories? The constraints?

“You didn’t fail eight ways,” Jeff said. “You found eight ways the system didn’t have enough to listen to you.”

The quality of your prompt is not about clever “hacks”—it’s about context, criteria, and constraints.

Prompting is a pedagogy: We are modeling for students how to ask precise questions, set criteria, and iterate. That is AI literacy.

Meet Teachers Where They Are

Rick Gaston and Courtney Morgan from Kira emphasized a simple, human truth: people learn faster when they feel safe and seen.

“We like to meet teachers where they’re at to help them begin with AI,” Rick said. “Start with lesson content they’re comfortable with and have them experience how quickly AI can provide new ideas in that content area.”

“We believe in learning by doing,” Courtney added. “We facilitate that process so teachers can experience that our AI tools can be their teaching buddies.”

I love that phrase: teaching buddies. Not a shortcut. An assistant or collaborator who drafts, riffs, and reframes so that educators can focus on the human aspects of teaching, such as relationships, feedback, and instructional decision-making.

Time: The Gift Teachers Actually Feel

Jeff’s coaching mantra resonated with the chat: “What is the one thing I can give you that no one else can? Time.” When AI saves a teacher 30 minutes tonight, their stance moves from skeptical to curious. When it saves them three hours before conferences, they become advocates.

Concrete time-savers that build trust:

  • Parent emails: Draft a positive progress update with two examples of growth and one specific next step—translated into Spanish and English.
  • Rubric remix: Convert a long analytic rubric into a student-friendly checklist; add “I can” statements.
  • Formative checks: Generate two exit tickets (one multiple-choice, one open-ended) targeting the same standard; include an answer key/rubric slice.

When teachers see the time they can save and then shift to students or colleague interactions, they’re more willing to explore deeper integrations of AI into their practice.

Additional insights from participants (courtesy of Kira)

About Kira

Kira is an AI-powered teaching & learning platform built to save teachers time, personalize instruction, and keep teachers in control. During the panel discussion, attendees had the chance to learn more about the platform and the AI Tutor. “This is just a quick preview of the Kira platform,” said Courtney, “and why we keep mentioning the built-in AI Tutor we’re really proud of.”

At its core, the AI Tutor is designed to coach, rather than simply provide answers. Students can highlight any passage and ask a question, or simply discuss it directly with the tutor. “You’re going to see me try to make it solve the problem for me,” Courtney joked, “but it won’t. Instead, it walks you through highly scaffolded steps.” That means support questions, targeted hints, and extra practice. The Tutor will work at nudging learners toward the how and why, not just the what. You can adjust the support level and reading level per student. It never gives direct answers and provides context-aware, course-specific feedback.

The AI Tutor is subject-agnostic and works across K–12 courses, math included. It’s available to both teachers and students, and it’s been a game-changer for first-time teachers who lean on it to deepen their own understanding while teaching. The message is clear: AI as a teaching buddy, not a replacement.

Differentiation is built in. Teachers can adjust the tutor’s level of support if students are over-relying on it, or increase it for learners who need more targeted assistance, including those with IEPs or language-learning needs. The goal is precision teaching: the right help, to the right student, at the right moment.

Getting started is easy. Kira offers ready-to-use courses, including AI Demystified for students, answering the big questions, “What is AI? What is it doing? How do I use it responsibly?”—and AI 101 for Educators, which builds teacher AI literacy. Looking to be part of a learning community?

Join the upcoming AI 101 for Educators cohort starting in October. Learn more and express your interest here! It is a short, self-paced PD (about 2 hours) for any subject area that builds confidence using AI in real classrooms.

It will cover:

What is AI, and what AI tools are helpful for educators?

How can I teach my students to use AI responsibly?

How can I use AI tools to enhance my students’ critical thinking?

How can I reduce risks and maximize the benefits of using AI in the classroom?

Once you fill out the form, the team at Kira will follow up with more details.

Learn more about their AI 101 PD cohort here.

About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI’. In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, AI and the Law, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.

Guest post: When AI Meets a 91-Year-Old Carpenter: Rethinking the Role of Empathy in Education

Guest post by Gary Jader

g.jader@comcast.net

I never expected artificial intelligence to change the way I listen.

But it has.

Not in the way you might think — not with smart assistants, personalized lesson plans, or AI-generated quizzes. No, for me, it started with coffee and quiet conversation.

Every Sunday for the past 15 years, I’ve sat down with Russ, a 91-year-old master carpenter. He’s the kind of guy who builds houses with his hands, still reads blueprints better than books, and spent decades showing up to Emotions Anonymous meetings because the words he needed weren’t available anywhere else. Russ is dyslexic. He’s quiet. He’s deep. And he’s wise.

But that wisdom — decades of it — was hard to capture. He struggled to get the words out. His kids never really listened. His friends mostly stayed on the surface. Even in men’s groups, the real stuff — shame, regret, transformation — often went unsaid.

Then something surprising happened.

I started bringing our conversations to ChatGPT. Not to replace Russ, but to amplify his voice — to help us understand what he was really trying to say. I would enter his phrases, his metaphors, his pauses — and the AI would respond with uncanny clarity, warmth, and insight. It was like someone had installed a cochlear implant for the soul.

Suddenly, Russ’s stories became prose. His insights became chapters. The builder found his blueprint for truth.

That experiment became a book. Cracked Open: A Field Guide for Men in Search of the Truth, and it is not a book about AI. It’s a book made possible by AI. And it’s made me rethink everything I thought I knew about the role of technology in learning — especially emotional learning.


Empathy Is the New Literacy

I taught graduate school for 17 years. I spent countless hours helping students articulate ideas, frame arguments, and structure their thinking. But I never had a tool like this.

To be clear, I’m not talking about ChatGPT as a replacement for student voice — I’m talking about it as a mirror. A probe. A translator. A collaborator. When used well, it becomes a catalyst for self-awareness, not a shortcut around it.

The most surprising thing?

The empathy.

Over the past year, I’ve worked with this tool nearly every day. And while the technology evolves, one thing has remained consistent: its capacity to reflect back the emotional tone of a person’s experience — not just the words, but the meaning behind the words. Whether we were writing about Russ’s regret over spanking his kids or his frustration with shallow men’s conversations, the AI didn’t just generate text. It offered presence.

And presence, as any educator knows, is the rarest and most powerful tool in learning.


What Russ Taught Me (with Help from AI)

Russ doesn’t believe in small talk.

He says we need to talk about “matters that matter.” And when I asked him what made him feel accepted in a conversation, he said: “When someone really listens and doesn’t try to fix me.”

AI, oddly enough, does that remarkably well. It doesn’t interrupt. It doesn’t judge. And when guided properly, it doesn’t spin its own agenda. It just listens, reflects, and gently invites more.

Through the AI, Russ’s quotes — what we now call Russisms — became chapter openers. His metaphors about wood, about warping and strength and building foundations, became the framing for chapters on parenting, aging, regret, conflict, death, and masculinity.

This wasn’t artificial intelligence replacing human wisdom.

It was AI helping recover it.


Implications for the Classroom

So what does this mean for educators?

A few things.

  1. AI can amplify unheard voices.
    Russ is dyslexic. Many of your students are too — or English learners, or neurodivergent, or emotionally guarded. AI can help them hear themselves in new ways. It can offer fluency before fluency arrives.
  2. AI can be a practice partner for courage.
    Russ and I created what we now call Cracked Open Circles — spaces where men talk honestly about what’s really going on. In classrooms, students often avoid emotional risk. But AI offers a strange safety — a “listener” who won’t laugh, interrupt, or gossip. That’s fertile ground for growth.
  3. AI can teach reflection.
    With the right prompt, ChatGPT becomes a Socratic coach. It can ask follow-ups, reframe narratives, or help students synthesize personal experience with academic content. That’s not cheating. That’s scaffolding.
  4. AI can model tone and humility.
    Russ once said, “I no longer refer to people by their name. I refer to them as ‘a human being.’ That helps me feel less judgmental.” That idea, fed to AI, came back as a short meditation on compassion and seeing others as flawed and trying. What would happen if students fed their own values into an AI and asked it to reflect those back as a story, a letter, or a lesson?

The Real Assignment

We live in an age of noise — performative posts, polarized opinions, and deep emotional isolation.

According to a recent study, only 27% of men say they have six or more close friends — down from 55% in 1990. Over 70% of men report feeling inadequate at work. Most don’t talk about their inner world at all.

We don’t need more content.

We need more courage. More clarity. More connection.

AI, surprisingly, can help with that.

Not by replacing human relationship — but by preparing us for it. By giving us a dry run. By letting us rehearse hard conversations, rewrite tired narratives, and finally — finally — tell the truth.


Final Thought

Russ listened to a popular men’s podcast a few months ago. He sat quietly through the whole thing, then turned to me and said:

“This is great. But what are they doing about it?”

That became the question that drives our work.

Cracked Open Circles is our answer — one story at a time, one circle at a time.

And now, perhaps, one classroom at a time.


About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI’. In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.

Acceleration Academies are Serving the Students Society Wrote off

A guest post by Kelli Campbell

I grew up in a small town in rural Illinois. Neither of my parents has a high school diploma, so I am a first-generation high school graduate. Having that diploma opened a world of possibilities to me that would otherwise have been closed, including going on to earn a college degree, which then led to a terrific career and becoming the CEO of Acceleration Academies.

It was my high school diploma that put me on that path to giving back through a career dedicated to improving education. I began decades ago working on products that brought online educational video into the classroom. Now, I have the privilege of helping young people who, like me, face and overcome barriers impeding their education.

I love telling the story about growing up in rural Illinois to graduation candidates attending our Acceleration Academies. Because I want every young person to know they have a path open to them achieving their own dreams, I say to them, “I am a first-generation high school graduate, and now I’m a CEO. You can be anything you want to be!”

Reconnecting Students Who Have Been Pushed Out

At Acceleration Academies (AA), we focus on students who are disengaged. Usually, that means they have dropped out, but we find that more often than not, these students feel like they were pushed out by a traditional approach to schooling that wasn’t supporting their needs. They may have to work full-time to support their families, or they may already have a little one of their own. They may struggle with mental health, such as paralyzing anxiety about attending a school with 1,000 other students. Some students drop out because of bullying or fall behind because of food insecurity. There are so many challenges students can face that have nothing to do with their ability or drive. Instead, it is a school environment that doesn’t work with the circumstances of their lives.

We partner with local school districts to overcome that barrier by providing an alternative school environment where students get all kinds of support, no matter the challenges they face. They get a second chance at a high school diploma with no cost to them. The districts benefit by graduating more students and recovering the funding they lost when students disenrolled.

‘Content Coaches’ and ‘Graduation Candidates’

Creating a different environment is so central to our model that it even filters into the language we use. Our students are called “graduation candidates” to remind them that they are there to complete a goal – a goal, we tell them, that they are 100 percent capable of reaching. Our teachers are called “content coaches” because they help students work through their classes and assignments. We even have staff who will call students who have trouble waking up to their alarm to make sure they get out the door. Our staff will even help them find a job with an employer who will accommodate their school schedule and prioritize their education.

A Different Environment

All of this, our entire model, is about removing barriers and adding in support to help students overcome obstacles. That includes the setting. Our schools offer a cafe-style environment with wide open spaces, varied seating and working areas, several small rooms for meetings, and enclosed workspaces for students who prefer a more private setting.

Students take one class at a time, generally taking about three to four weeks per class, so their content coaches can guide them one subject at a time. We offer a hybrid format that allows them to learn in-person and online. There’s flexible scheduling for everyone so students who have obligations during traditional school hours can come in during the evenings or on weekends. Pacing is up to the student, guided and encouraged by coaches.

We also operate on a 12-month schedule, rather than the traditional nine-month academic calendar. Many of our students are behind grade level, and they need extra months to get back on track. We’ve also found that students lose connection with school during longer breaks and are less likely to continue with their education when they haven’t attended for even a couple of weeks.

A Win-Win-Win for Everyone

Each AA site is a program of choice within the partner district, which makes it a win-win-win. The district recovers funding when students re-enroll and their graduation rate improves as we matriculate students. Young people get back on track to earn a diploma and all the educational and career opportunities that come with it. Their immediate family and even their communities benefit from the increased economic potential each graduate earns as well.

It’s a win for students who have a variety of reasons for needing something different. For example, those who are mostly on the right track, but get into a little trouble, can continue working at their district’s AA site and then either return to their traditional school or continue with us. It is as much a win for the students who are struggling academically or socially as it is for those who want (or need) to graduate faster. See several inspiring student stories here.

A Gwinnett County Public Schools student told me her story recently. She had been depressed, unable to get out of bed and attend school because she felt afraid, almost paralyzed at school. She enrolled at Acceleration Academies after about three months at her parents’ urging. For the first six weeks, she told me she would come to school and go straight to one of the low-stimulus rooms we offer and wouldn’t talk to anyone. Little by little, she began to feel safe.

A few months later, this student walked with me – who was once, to her, a scary adult – around her school. Now, she is confident and sure of her surroundings. She is able to communicate, to advocate for herself, to tell a painful story about a hard time in her life to a stranger. This young woman is still a graduation candidate in our school, and I hope she earns her diploma. Even if she doesn’t, I’m proud to be a part of an organization that helped her find her confidence and reconnect with her goals and her community.

At every graduation I attend, someone will approach me, maybe a teacher, a caregiver, or a graduate, to tell me their personal story and thank me for Acceleration Academies. Every time, when I ask who wants to stay in school, every one of those students who had been labeled as a dropout raises their hands. It really is such meaningful work we are able to do here, and the only reason I am able to do it is because years ago I overcame my own barriers to earn a diploma. I want every graduation candidate to have the same opportunity to improve their communities, and that means removing every barrier we find with student-centered support.

About Kelli

Kelli Campbell is a first-generation high school graduate and a first-generation college graduate. She is the CEO of Acceleration Academies.


About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI’. In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.

Back to School: Building Skills for the Future Starts Now

As we head into a new school year, there’s always a familiar pattern—new schedules, maybe new students, seating charts, lesson planning, and so much more. We all have our usual back-to-school routines, but what if instead we took some time to learn more about our students and brought in opportunities that will prepare them with essential skills they’ll need for the future?

In our classrooms, we are teaching the next generation of creators, innovators, problem-solvers, and leaders. As the world continues to evolve rapidly, largely shaped by AI and other emerging technologies, our methods and maybe even our approach to education may need to be adjusted

Here are a few practical, engaging ways to kick off a new school year that will help students build future-ready or future-focused skills.

1. Foster Curiosity with a Future-Forward Inquiry Project

One of my favorite ways to begin the year is with a “What If…” inquiry activity. Present an open-ended question to students:

  • What if school took place in the metaverse?
  • What if every job used AI in some way?
  • What if we had to solve global problems using only local resources?

Then give students an opportunity to explore and discuss. They can brainstorm, sketch ideas, conduct research, or even collaborate in small groups. An activity like this will not only spark creativity and critical thinking, but it’s also a great way to gather insight into their interests, comfort level with tech, and their ability to think in different ways.

Bonus: You can ask this same question later in the year to compare or even to use it as a focus for a full project or assessment to see how their thinking has evolved.

2. Practice Communication Skills

Our students need to be able to communicate clearly across digital platforms, cultural contexts, and group dynamics. Early in the year, try giving students a prompt like:

“What would you want the world to know about your generation?”

Have them respond however they choose, whether sharing out loud, creating a short video, an infographic, or even a podcast clip. Another way to boost communication is by making time for a gallery walk or student showcase. Getting students to share their ideas and discuss them with one another is great for building the classroom community.

It also builds media literacy, student confidence, and fosters collaboration. And another benefit is that for us as educators, we have truly authentic artifacts of student voice and that helps students to feel that their work is more meaningful and valued in our classrooms.

3. Use AI Tools to Teach Digital Literacy and Responsibility

I have long been saying that whether we’re ready or not, we have to be willing to embrace the changes in technology. Over the past few years, we have experience so many changes because of AI. Our students will grow up and work in an AI-powered world. To prepare them, and ourselves, we need to focus on AI literacy, which is more than just explaining how tools like ChatGPT or Google Gemini or another LLM works. We also need to help them understand the when, why, and how to use these tools responsibly.

Start simple. Involve students in generating text with an AI tool and then ask them to fact-check it. Another idea is to generate a paragraph and ask students about the tone, does it sound human, and other questions that get them to really think about the output that is generated.

What I love about doing these activities in my classroom and when I am training educators, is that they open up important discussions about ethics, bias, and considerations of how to evaluate the information received. creativity.

4. Build Collaboration and Problem-Solving Skills

Problem-solving is most effective when students are working together to brainstorm ideas and iterate solutions.

One idea is to try a design challenge in the first weeks of school that connect to your content area. For example:

  • In science: Build a prototype for a sustainable invention.
  • In social studies: Redesign your community for accessibility.
  • In language arts: Create a character who solves a major future problem.

I sometimes only offer basic overviews with minimal instructions and encourage students to lead the way. I emphasize the process itself by asking them, “How did they approach the task? What obstacles did they face? What did they learn?”

An activity like this promotes real-world teamwork, growth mindset, and building resilience—all skills that will benefit our students far beyond our classroom.

5. Focus on SEL and Identity as a Foundation

Before students can engage deeply in learning, they need to feel seen, heard, and safe. The beginning of the year is the ideal time to promote social-emotional learning (SEL) by helping students explore who they are and what they care about.

Some activities that I have used and that colleagues have shared, include:

  • “My Learning Superpower” profiles
  • Vision boards for the year ahead
  • Journaling about strengths and challenges
  • Weekly gratitude or goal-setting circles
  • Beginning of the year “About Me” and a revisit of the responses later in the year.

Activities like these suggestions help students build self-awareness, empathy, and regulation, which are essential for pushing through both academic and personal challenges in a changing world.

When students better understand themselves, they will be more prepared to set their own goals, advocate for their needs, and engage in learning with purpose.

6. Introduce Real-World Problem Scenarios

One of the most exciting ways to build future-ready skills is through project-based learning based on real-world issues. Even in the first few weeks of school, you can get started by suggesting scenarios like:

  • A local water crisis that needs data analysis and a communication plan
  • A new social media platform that students must market ethically
  • A schoolwide challenge to reduce waste or carbon emissions

These activities tie directly to critical thinking, civic engagement, and applied learning which gives students a chance to make meaningful connections between what they know and where they live.

7. Create Space for Reflection and Metacognition

Helping students understand how they learn and not just what they learn is a game-changer.

In the classroom, build in short reflection prompts such as:

  • “What challenged you today?”
  • “What’s one mistake that taught you something?”
  • “How did you show persistence?”
  • “What did you try that was new?”
  • “What is something that you could do better tomorrow?”

Use tools like Padlet, Wakelet, a mind-mapping tool, even podcasting tools or traditional notebooks like I did years ago, to give students a space to share their voice during their learning journey. Over time, these reflections can shape stronger self-regulation, grit, and ownership.

The start of the school year is a time when culture is built, expectations are set, and curiosity is at its peak. It’s also when students begin to decide:

“Is this a place where I will be welcome?”

“Will I improve over the year?
“Will my ideas matter?”
“Can I shape my future here?”

Classrooms should be a space that reflect the world our students are preparing for, and not the world that we grew up in. The future is a place where AI literacy, collaboration, ethical thinking, creativity, and resilience are woven into our classrooms, starting from the first day and continuing throughout the year. It just takes one step forward to begin.

About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI’. In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.

Professional Development on AI

Prior post on Edutopia

Over the past few years, we have seen many changes in education. We live and teach in an increasingly digital world that involves rapid technological advancements through emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI). The technologies are not only impacting our lives as educators, but they are also impacting the world of work that our students will enter.

To best prepare our students, educators must constantly adapt and evolve to keep up with these changes. However, there are challenges associated with these technologies, including a lack of professional learning opportunities, insufficient time to participate, and uncertainty about the best options for learning. Bringing in new technology can also feel like adding to an already overflowing plate. 

Beyond the basic technology skills that educators need for everyday teaching, they also need to be knowledgeable about emerging technologies, particularly AI, and how to bring them into their classrooms. Over the past five years, my work has focused on collaborating with teachers to get them started with emerging technology—including, more recently, AI. Here are some things that work when designing AI-related professional learning.

AI Professional Development for Educators

Professional development (PD) focused on implementing classroom technology goes beyond simply training educators in how to use it and apply it to their curriculum. It requires rich and personalized learning experiences that will engage educators and enable them to see the possibilities available for amplifying learning through educational technology. 

Building knowledge in an area such as AI and other emerging technologies takes time with consistent and guided exploration. It also requires that educators be able to explore a variety of resources to find what best meets their specific needs. Without support, teachers are less likely to dive into these new technologies, especially if they do not see the relevance to their content area. 

Continue reading this post on Edutopia

About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI’. In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.

Transform Public Speaking with Yoodli: Your AI Coach

Guest post by Paula Johnson, see Paula’s other blogs here and subscribe!

Public speaking. Just reading those two words probably made your palms sweat a little. Whether you’re a student giving a book report, a teacher presenting at a PD (with no AC and bad coffee), or someone just trying to sound confident in a meeting, speaking clearly and effectively is a real skill, and one that usually comes with years of awkward ums and cringey filler words.

Enter Yoodli, your friendly-but-firm AI-powered speech coach. Think of it like Toastmasters… if Toastmasters lived inside your laptop and never interrupted you

🧰 What Is Yoodli?

Yoodli is an AI tool designed to help users improve their public speaking skills. It analyzes your speech in real-time or after a recording and gives you feedback on things like:

  • Filler words (“um,” “like,” “you know”)
  • Pacing (Are you sprinting or sedating your audience?)
  • Word choice and sentence complexity
  • Eye contact and body language (with video)
  • And yes, even your “uhhh” to actual word ratio

Yoodli gives you a transcript and a confidence score, plus suggestions that range from helpful to brutally honest. It’s basically Simon Cowell with AI ethics and a smiley face interface.

🏫 Classroom Uses: From the Speech Team to the Math Teacher

Yoodli is one of those tools that sneaks up on you with its usefulness. Here’s how educators can integrate it meaningfully across content areas:

💬 1. Speech & Debate or Language Arts

The most obvious use case. Have students record their speeches or presentations, then analyze their own pacing, tone, and use of filler words using Yoodli. Students can track their growth over time, which is far more helpful (and less awkward) than just watching themselves on video.

🎤 2. ELL/ESL Support

For multilingual students, Yoodli provides private, low-stakes speaking practice. It doesn’t judge accents; it focuses on clarity, pacing, and fluency. Students can speak into the tool and get instant feedback, helping build confidence without the pressure of speaking in front of the class.

🧠 3. Teacher PD & Self-Reflection

Want to see how you really sound during that lesson on quadratic equations? Use Yoodli to record part of your instruction or PD session. You might be surprised how often you say “so yeah” (guilty). This can also be helpful for instructional coaches working with teachers on presentation or communication skills.

🧪 4. Science Fairs and Project-Based Learning

Anytime students are explaining a process or presenting their thinking, Yoodli can give them that extra polish. It encourages students to reflect on how they communicate their ideas, not just what they say, but how they say it.

💻 5. Interview Practice and Career Readiness

Mock interviews? Elevator pitches? College essays turned spoken narratives? Yoodli is ideal for helping students practice for real-world moments where confidence and clarity are key.

🧠 The AI Behind the Tool

Yoodli uses automatic speech recognition (ASR) and natural language processing (NLP) to analyze spoken words in real time. Think of it as a very nerdy parrot that listens, transcribes, and then gently tells you you’re rambling.

Some quick nerd notes:

  • Speech recognition turns your words into text (transcription)
  • NLP analyzes your speech for filler words, tone, sentiment, and repetition
  • Yoodli can detect your pace and word variety over time

Importantly, Yoodli doesn’t train its model on your data without consent. Users can opt into saving their data for progress tracking, but educators should check settings for student accounts. They’ve made good strides toward ethical design—no surprise, since one of the co-founders used to work at Google AI but left to build tech that was more human-focused.

Data privacy tip: Make sure to read the privacy policy if you’re using it with students under 18, and consider creating class-specific accounts or using it in “demo mode” with no login required.


🧪 Try It Out: Tips for Teachers

Here’s how to get rolling without needing a 47-slide training deck:

  • Start small: Have students practice a 1-minute talk on any topic. Favorite food. Least favorite math concept. Why dogs are better than cats. (Yoodli is cat-neutral.)
  • Use the transcript: Yoodli gives a full transcript of each session, great for writing reflection, peer feedback, or revision activities.
  • Gamify it: Who can lower their filler word count the most in one week? Who has the smoothest pacing? Instant leaderboard.
  • Model it: Record yourself first and share the feedback you got. Vulnerability builds classroom trust (and shows that even grown-ups say “like” too much).
  • Be intentional: Don’t let Yoodli become a surveillance tool. Use it for growth, not gotchas. Let students control their recordings and reflection.

👩‍🏫 Final Thoughts: AI Coaching That Doesn’t Need Coffee

Yoodli isn’t replacing speech teachers or taking over your drama class—it’s a supplement, not a substitute. But it is an amazing, low-barrier way to help students hear themselves and improve one of the most universally useful skills: effective communication.

Plus, unlike your coworker in the next room, Yoodli never interrupts you mid-sentence to ask if you’ve “seen the new attendance policy.” So that’s a win.

I believe educators deserve access to tools, knowledge, and support that empower them to do their best work. If my content has helped you, inspired you, or made your day a little lighter, supporting me on Ko-fi helps me continue creating resources that support teachers who are changing the world one student at a time.

If this work supports you, you can support it too: ko-fi.com/paulajohnsontech

About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI’. In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.

Developing AI Literacy

Educators must stay informed, current, and ahead of the game (if possible) when it comes to emerging technologies. This means fostering the development of AI literacy skills. Being AI literate means more than knowing the basics about the technology or understanding relevant terms such as machine learning and algorithms. Literacy involves knowing the uses of AI in the world and being aware of the ethical considerations involved with its use. AI literacy should focus on developing skills to critically evaluate information and content generated by AI as well as to identify misinformation. Teachers should also know how to use AI in safe, ethical, and responsible ways and model this use for students.

Getting Started Teaching AI Literacy Skills

Introducing AI concepts at an earlier age gives students the opportunity to build their knowledge and skills over time—with younger students, starting with the basics of AI, such as focusing on where we see it in daily life. Begin with key definitions, and find resources that have been vetted and are safe for student and educator use. Several organizations provide a wealth of resources for educators, including ready-to-run lessons.

Modeling AI use in the classroom: As we teach students about AI, we can engage them in activities where they evaluate images, text, or videos to decide whether they are AI-generated or real. I have used game-based learning tools, such as Quizizz AI, to quickly create a quiz to check students’ understanding of the concepts covered, or Eduaide.Ai, to make a gamified activity or lesson related to AI literacy.

Continue reading on Edutopia.

About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI’. In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.

Reimagining Assessment with AI: Purposeful Tools for Transforming Learning

Educators today have more options than ever for assessing student learning. Years ago, our toolkit was limited to paper-based tests, verbal check-ins, classroom observations, and creative projects. While effective, these methods were time-consuming and often didn’t lead to meaningful engagement with feedback. In my own experience, students would frequently glance at their grade, then toss the paper aside—missing the valuable feedback meant to help them grow.

We know feedback is critical for student growth—it must be authentic, meaningful, and timely. Since the end of 2022, advances in generative AI have introduced powerful tools that can help educators meet these goals more efficiently and effectively. When chosen and implemented thoughtfully, AI-powered tools can transform how we assess, teach, and connect with students.

Rethinking Assessment with AI

AI tools are not a replacement for strong pedagogy; rather, they serve as a support system that can amplify good teaching. Traditional assessments are now being enhanced—or in some cases, reimagined—with technology that provides real-time data, personalized feedback, and engaging formats that meet students where they are.

When deciding whether to integrate a specific AI tool, I always ask myself:

  • Will it help me assess student learning more efficiently?
  • Can it help me provide feedback that students will actually read and act on?
  • Does it allow for differentiation and accessibility?

One major advantage of AI tools is automated scoring and instant feedback, which significantly reduces grading time. This allows educators to focus on what matters most—supporting students. AI-driven analysis offers immediate and valuable insights into student performance, helping educators to identify trends and tailor instruction to meet evolving needs.

AI can also ensure greater consistency in grading and provide accessible pathways for students with diverse needs through features like text-to-speech, translation, and adaptive learning pathways. With AI tracking student progress, questions and assignments can be adjusted in real-time to offer the right level of challenge and support.

Choosing the Right AI Tools: Questions to Guide You

With so many tools available, selection can be overwhelming. To avoid using tech for tech’s sake, consider these essential questions:

  • What is the purpose? Begin with the “why.” What instructional challenge are you trying to solve?
  • Does it support your content area and learning goals? Choose tools aligned with curriculum standards and classroom objectives.
  • Will it elevate your teaching, not replace it? Technology should enhance, not substitute, quality instruction.
  • Is student data safe? Always evaluate data privacy policies and ensure compliance with FERPA, COPPA, or your district’s guidelines.
  • Does it offer choice and voice? Look for tools that let students express learning in various formats—written, spoken, visual, etc.
  • How user-friendly is it for families and students? Accessibility and ease of use matter for long-term success.

I also ask myself:

  • Do I want students to continue discussions beyond class time?
  • How quickly can I provide feedback?
  • Is there an option for audio, video, or scaffolded feedback?

4 AI Tools to Get Started

Here are four versatile AI tools that I regularly recommend for planning, instruction, and assessment:

⭐️ Curipod

A fast way to create interactive, student-driven lessons. Simply input a topic, and Curipod generates an engaging lesson with polls, open-ended questions, word clouds, and more. It’s great for sparking classroom discussion and promoting real-time student voice.

📘 Diffit

Perfect for differentiating content across grade levels and reading abilities. Input a prompt, website, PDF, or even a video link, and Diffit generates reading passages with vocabulary support and comprehension questions. You can export content to Google tools for seamless integration.

🧠 Eduaide.Ai

Designed by teachers, for teachers, Eduaide offers over 120 content creation tools. From syllabi and lesson plans to gamified activities, feedback, and even IEP support, this tool can save hours of planning time while providing high-quality resources that align with best practices.

Quizizz AI

Quizizz AI makes assessment creation fast and fun. Input a webpage, document, or even a set of questions, and the platform generates quizzes with real-world scenarios and themes. Since last Arpil, Quizizz includes accommodation profiles to ensure equitable access for all learners.

Final Thoughts: Plan with Purpose, Teach with Intention

AI should never be a gimmick. Before adopting any new tool, always reflect on how it will support student learning and make your work as an educator more impactful. The most effective tools are the ones that align with your goals and empower students to become active participants in their learning.

We are also responsible for modeling ethical and responsible AI use in our classrooms. As students explore these tools, we can guide them in using AI as a partner in learning, one that supports curiosity, creativity, and critical thinking.

The future of education isn’t just about technology—it’s about purposefully using technology to create more engaging, inclusive, and personalized learning experiences. AI isn’t here to replace us but to support us in doing what we do best: inspiring and empowering learners.

About Rachelle

Dr. Rachelle Dené Poth is a Spanish and STEAM: What’s Next in Emerging Technology Teacher at Riverview High School in Oakmont, PA. Rachelle is also an attorney with a Juris Doctor degree from Duquesne University School of Law and a Master’s in Instructional Technology. Rachelle received her Doctorate in Instructional Technology, and her research focus was on AI and Professional Development. In addition to teaching, she is a full-time consultant and works with companies and organizations to provide PD, speaking, and consulting services. Contact Rachelle for your event!

Rachelle is an ISTE-certified educator and community leader who served as president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network. By EdTech Digest, she was named the EdTech Trendsetter of 2024, one of 30 K-12 IT Influencers to follow in 2021, and one of 150 Women Global EdTech Thought Leaders in 2022.

She is the author of ten books, including ‘What The Tech? An Educator’s Guide to AI, AR/VR, the Metaverse and More” and ‘How To Teach AI.’ In addition, other books include, “In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking,” “Unconventional Ways to Thrive in EDU,” “The Future is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead,” “Chart A New Course: A Guide to Teaching Essential Skills for Tomorrow’s World, “True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us,” “Things I Wish […] Knew” and her newest “How To Teach AI” is available from ISTE or on Amazon.

Contact Rachelle to schedule sessions about Artificial Intelligence, Coding, AR/VR, and more for your school or event! Submit the Contact Form.

Follow Rachelle on Bluesky, Instagram, and X at @Rdene915

**Interested in writing a guest blog for my site? Would love to share your ideas! Submit your post here. Looking for a new book to read? Find these available at bit.ly/Pothbooks

************ Also, check out my THRIVEinEDU Podcast Here!

Join my show on THRIVEinEDU on Facebook. Join the group here.